So a former Olympian has been arrested in Washington DC for vandalism. The UK, in a rare display of moral clarity, has condemned the attack on global heritage. One might ask: what does an Olympian have to do with heritage? Everything, if you understand the symbolism.
We live in an age of intellectual decay. The modern West, like late Rome, has lost its sense of the sacred. Statues, monuments, even the very idea of a shared culture are now seen as oppressions to be smashed. The Olympian, once a symbol of discipline and excellence, now joins the ranks of the wreckers. This is not an isolated incident. It is a symptom of a civilisation that has forgotten its own roots.
The Victorian era had its flaws, but it understood the need for order and reverence. A Victorian vandal would have been shamed, ostracised, perhaps flogged. Today, we call them activists. We pretend that destruction is creation. The desecration of heritage is a form of self-harm, a people attacking its own memory.
The UK's condemnation is welcome, but it rings hollow when our own institutions capitulate to the mob. We decry the vandalism in Washington, yet we allow our own statues to be torn down without a whisper of legal consequence. This is the death of shame. Once shame dies, civilisation dies with it.
We must ask: what is the point of an Olympian, if not to inspire? What is the point of heritage, if not to teach? If we continue to treat our past as a crime scene, we will have no future. The fall of Rome was not caused by barbarians at the gates, but by the rot within. We are witnessing that rot today, one vandalised monument at a time.
Let us not pretend this is about justice. It is about self-loathing. And self-loathing nations, like self-loathing individuals, eventually destroy themselves.








